This blog explores my professional experiences and personal feelings as I have worked with people who are in the last chapter of their lives. I dedicate this blog to all of these people who have each taught me something new about life and about myself. The stories in this blog, however, are all fictionalized. Any resemblance to real life people and circumstances is purely coincidence.

Friday, December 14, 2007

One of my colleagues just came back from a trip to India and told me about a place called Manikarnika Ghat, also known as "The Great Cremation Ground."

According to Hindu mythology, being burned here provides an instant gateway to liberation from the cycle of births and rebirths. Karmic bonds are suppose to be burnt along with the body, which is how one is liberated from needing to be rebirthed. It is said that the funeral fires at the Manikarnika ghat have been burning for thousands of years. A constant stream of corpses come to this ghat to be burnt, day and night. According to my colleague, most corpses do not get enough time to burn properly and are often unceremoniously dumped, half burnt into the sacred river.

I have never traveled to India, but if I do, this certainly seems like an interesting place to check out.